Zacuto is having a big 7-day clearance sale starting today, offering significant discounts and even gift cards.
Starting today and until July 5th, Zacuto is holding a massive clearance sale of their discontinued and B-stock inventory, with some of their products getting as much as a 60% price drop. So, if you’ve always wanted to get some of those very popular Zacuto accessories but have held back due to the premium prices, then this is your lucky week!
To sweeten the deal even further, Zacuto is even throwing in a $100 Gift Card to use in August if you spend over $500 during the sale.
Here are some of the sorts of items you can find on sale:
Electronic Viewfinders:
Whether you shoot on a DSLR or higher-end cameras, EVFs can be a great addition to your rig as they allow you to position your camera on your shoulder while still being able to monitor the image, often giving you a better image quality than what cameras offer out of the box. The offerings from Zacuto are popular options, but are often beyond the budget of beginner filmmakers.
Zacuto Z-finder EVF Pro
The Zacuto Z-finder EVF Pro, for example, is a 3.2” LCD monitor with flip-up loupe, and offers many exposure and focus assist tools. It is compatible will all cameras with an HDMI output, and is powered by common Canon LP-E6 batteries. With a 50% discount on the demo Zacuto Z-finder EVF Pro bringing it from $1,000 to only $500, this may be your chance to hop on the EVF bandwagon.
The Zacuto Gratical Eye
Alternatively, if you are looking for something a bit more high-end, the Lemo-powered, SDI-only Zacuto Gratical Eye may be for you. Offering amazing image quality with true blacks and great sharpness thanks to its OLED display, as well as LUT support and multiple assist tools, this is truly a professional solution for your monitoring needs. You can read all about it in our hands-on review HERE. The demo Zacuto Gratical Eye is down to $1,365 from $1,950.
Shoulder Rigs:
Possibly the kind of accessory for which the brand is best known, Zacuto shoulder rigs are synonymous with quality and a modular, functional design. The Recoil series, for example, is built around the concept of keeping your camera always balanced on your shoulder, regardless of your configuration. Whether you decide to change between heavy cine lenses or small Micro Four-Thirds glass, or decide to add a big battery solution to the back of your camera, the Recoil system allows you to easily move the camera back and forth to compensate for the weight shift and achieve perfect balance for more stability and comfort.
Zacuto VCT Pro Baseplate
At the heart of the Recoil system is the Zacuto VCT Pro Baseplate, which gives you a comfortable shoulder pad, removable 15mm rod support, a VCT tripod plate, a rosette, plenty of 1/4″-20 accessory mounts, and a sliding plate that gives you the ability to adjust the exact position of your camera. The demo Zacuto VCT Pro Baseplate is $390 down from $650, and is the perfect starting point from which to build your own shoulder rig.
The following taylor-made Recoil Rigs for specific cameras are also on sale:
Indie Recoil Rig: A universal rig for DSLR and other flat-bottom cameras. $999 down from $1,600.
Sony FS7 Recoil Rig: $600 down from $1,200.
Cine Mini EVF Recoil Rig: For cameras with a top handle like the Panasonic DVX200 or Blackmagic Design URSA Mini. $617.50 down from $900.
Sony FS5 Recoil Rig: Includes Grip Relocator and Top Plate. $750 down from $1,350.
These are only a few of the discounted items, with plenty of offers on smaller accessories like rods, handles and accessory mounts, so make sure you head over to their Clearance Sale page to grab a bargain!
Would you recommend Zacuto products to shooters in the market for a rig or EVF? Let us know in the comments below!

If you have been in the business for a while as a cameraman already, you might remember a time when there were cameras that you could just pick up for the first time “out of the box” or from the TV station that hired you and you were able to use it “as is”.
Amount of different cameras
Nowadays, the amount of different camera brands and models that we are using as professionals on a daily basis is constantly increasing. The average professional has a number of different cameras he’s working with, or hires them on occasion. There isn’t “one camera for the right job”, there’s loads of different ones for loads of different purposes.
For example, I still use my Canon C300 for many broadcast jobs as it’s an extremely popular camera with a beautiful image. Since it was released, I have also become a big fan of the Sony A7s, an amazingly small full frame camera with the most insane low light capability you have ever seen. I also ordered the Sony FS7, which will be my first permanent foray into 4K filmmaking, and I frequently hire an F55 or Red Epic or Dragon for higher end jobs. And sometimes (rarely though) I am even forced to work with traditional shoulder-mount broadcast cameras like the Sony PXW-800.
As you can see, that’s a huge range of cameras. The problem with that is that they come with viewfinders that differ hugely in quality and size. Also, they take some getting used to until you really confidently are able to focus with them. Oddly, in recent years, smaller cameras like the A7s seem to have better viewfinders than more “professional” cameras like the C300, for example. Sony has been pushing their OLED technology even into smaller and cheaper products like the A7 line and others, and they are superior to LED because of their reproduction of blacks, resolution and coming in at a small size.
Quality and compatibility of EVFs
When I tested the FS7 on my recent shoot on Vienna’s St. Stephens Cathedral (click here if you missed it), I was in a big hurry and couldn’t find a quick way to use preview LUTs on the supplied viewfinder, so I had to shoot looking at SLog 3 … and if you ever did that, you know that it’s extremely hard to judge focus (or color, for that matter) if you look at an Slog or C-Log image, while it gives you most latitude for post production.
So I ended up with some images that are out of focus simply also because I didn’t know the viewfinder well … and this is something that can easily happen to you if you hire cameras with a supplied viewfinder, especially if they are not very good …
When DSLRs first came out, we had the problem that the built-in viewfinder couldn’t be used for video, so we had to add loupes like Zacuto’s popular Z-Finder to magnify the image displayed on the back screen. This helped tremendously but on cameras like the Canon 5D Mark II, judging focus was still very hard because of the low resolution of the screen – at least the camera’s soft video images weren’t as susceptible to focusing errors as more modern cameras. Also, it was often hard to judge the displayed image in its entirety due to the magnification of many of the added loupes – the Z-Finder was no exception.
With sharper HD and now even 4K cameras the resolution problem became more prevalent. There are terrible EVFs or viewfinders on some very popular cameras, namely the C100 (Mark I, the Mark II has a better one, as does the C300), Sony F3, FS100, FS700 and many others. The FS100 and FS700 use a low quality screen with a lousy and long detachable loupe, impossible to judge focus on an HD image properly. It becomes of course much worse if you record 4K with the FS700 … an absolute nightmare and simply a gamble to get things in focus.
In general, if you ever had the chance to look at shallow depth of field 4K footage on a 4K screen, you have certainly realized that focusing is incredibly hard to get right – not just in that resolution, but it’s especially hard the higher the recorded resolution, obviously.
Nevertheless we mostly judge focus using low resolution viewfinders ….
One viewfinder for all cameras?
And this is exactly where the Zacuto Gratical comes in as an extremely interesting proposition … with the promise to work on almost every camera. When Zacuto announced the development of their high-resolution viewfinder a few years ago, many realized that it was time for such a product, but we had for a long time for the final product to arrive. And oddly enough, there aren’t many products on the market that can even be compared to the Gratical.
There are the Alphatron and Cineroid viewfinders, which are much cheaper, but made predominantly for DSLR shooters in need of an external viewfinder. The problem with both of them is their sheer size – both use relatively big LCD screens combined with a loupe, and the resolution isn’t that great either (rumor has it that they use the retina screens used also in iPhones). Zacuto also made their original Z-Finder EVF, which combined a small, lower resolution screen with the Z-Finder loupe.
While all of these viewfinders weren’t bad, they weren’t great – so why didn’t anyone come out with a smaller high resolution viewfinder compatible with all kinds of cameras before? The answer is simple: availability of the screens just wasn’t there. There are only few companies in the world which produce high quality screens in really small sizes and in quantities, and the comparably small niché of camera accessories simply wasn’t among their priorities.
Plus the Alphatron and Cineroid viewifinders also were too big for my taste (among many other issues I had with them), especially when used with a small camera. The shape of the Gratical makes much more sense when put next to any camera – a longer, slimmer design that can move very close to the camera allows for much more flexibility.
Sony came out with a really good OLED viewfinder for their F5 and F55 and I quite enjoy working with it whenever I use any of those cameras. However, there’s a big downside – it uses a proprietary connector and isn’t compatible with other cameras at all – not even the new FS7! Incredible for a $5,000 device, which makes the Zacuto Gratical look cheap in comparison.
Gratical build quality
To be able to use one really good viewfinder with all kinds of cameras means that there is no need to to readjust yourself to the “look” of different monitors and viewfinders constantly, and that’s a huge plus in this age of constantly changing cameras.
Before I talk about the individual features of the Gratical viewfinder, I want to mention its build quality, because that’s what I had most problems especially with on the Alphatron viewfinder in the past. I was always worried that the thing would break apart at some point.
Not so much with the Gratical. It seems to be build like tank out of very sturdy material, and Zacuto backed that up recently with running it over with a car in a very American fashion :-)
It really feels like something that can take a beating, and when I am spending that much money on something, I usually also want to make sure that I can hire it out to other filmmakers – and the Gratical really feels as sturdy as a rental item has to be. It’s built out of Aluminum Alloy, just like an Alexa EVF, which also makes it super lightweight.
Other Zacuto electronics like the original Zacuto EVF were build quite well too, but you can tell that a lot more money went into making the Gratical when you hold it in your hands. It feels like something really valuable and I can’t see any piece break off easily … Aluminum feels like the way to go for things like that!
It also has rubber over all its sensitive parts, namely the glass and the connectors. While I have to admit it looks a bit funny when cables are connected to it (with all the rubber protectors sticking away from it), those rubber protectors really do a good job when a connector is not in use. Plus you can’t lose them because they are attached to the Gratical.
Gratical form factor and rigging
The Gratical is an OLED viewfinder, which means it doesn’t have a larger LCD that can be used as a screen like on the Alphatron, Cineroid or the FS7 viewfinder. However, that doesn’t really matter to me at all – as mentioned before, I prefer a smaller unit over a wide unit with an LCD screen, especially on smaller cameras.
Zacuto have a lot of experience with building rigs, obviously, and because of the Gratical’s narrow shape, it can be put up quite closely to the side of a camera, which is perfect when you build up a rig. Try that with an Alphatron, good luck! Same problem with the FS7’s supplied viewfinder – the mounting solution that Sony added for the supplied viewfinder is atrocious … and it’s very hard to get in the right position.
The Gratical on the other hand comes with an industry standard Arri Rosette on the side, which works great with the Axis EVF mount that makes it very adjustable to any position. You can also use a standard 1/4 inch screw at the bottom alternatively. There are also 4 assignable (or re-assignable) buttons on the side of the unit as well as a joystick with another 4 assignable positions (until you push the joystick – then the four directions on it serve as the menu navigation). The cool thing is, all of these buttons can store really ANYTHING the Gratical can do. You can even program a LUT onto one of the buttons and switch between LUT and LOG image by the press of one button. Extremely neat and VERY useful!
Powering
It’s nice to see that the Gratical works with standard Canon LP-E6 batteries, which everybody already has. They seem to last for a many hours … how many exactly, I don’t know, but one LP-E6 battery got me through a full afternoon when I tested it, easily 4 hours, and it wasn’t fully drained when I stopped working with it. I didn’t use any of the jacks and no loop through, but according to Zacuto you get 3 hours constant run time if you do use all the features and ports at the same time. That’s pretty good for these small batteries – the OLED technology seems to require considerably less energy than LCDs. The battery mount is very well designed and deeply integrated into the Gratical, which is great – there is no chance of accidentally knocking off the battery like on some other viewfinders, especially the early models from Cineroid.
Zacuto also has a LP-E6 to D-Tap cable that can directly go into any battery with a D-Tap port, for example the Anton Bauer batteries. Considering these big brick batteries are standard on larger camera rigs like the F5/F55 and all sorts of traditional broadcast cameras, you never need to worry about powering the Gratical again.
Ports
The Gratical HD has two HD-SDI ports (in and out) and two HDMI ports (in and out). It allows you to loop through an image to an additional device. For example, you can attach a wireless HDMI transmitter to the Gratical (which gets its video feed from the camera, of course). You could send the video signal to video village like I frequently do using something like the Radian MC transmitter (read my review here). If you attach a recorder at the end of this chain, just be careful to disable overlays which would otherwise end up being burnt into your image.
Screen and resolution
The first thing you notice when you look through the Gratical HD is that the screen is almost square instead of 16 x 9. It’s 1280 by 1024 resolution, and it is devided into two sections. There’s the image area covering 1280 by 720 pixels used for the image, and a technical area that is used for vectorscopes and other additional image level information by factory default. However this section is completely user-definable as well – it can be displayed either on top or at the bottom of the image area, and it can also display information like audio meters, battery level and any other feature the Gratical has – so it’s fully customizable.
Apart from the great customization, I think that’s a really smart idea to separate the technical information from the image – there is hardly anything more annoying than a preview screen cluttered with overlays, making it impossible to judge the image.
720p resolution might not sound like a lot, but in fact it’s more than what most viewfinders offer – in fact I wasn’t able to make out individual pixels at all. Quite the contrary, I am usually a guy who loves to use red peaking to be able to judge focus better – not with the Gratical though (although of course the feature is there). It’s simply not necessary. If the diopter is adjusted correctly (double check when you use it!), it’s super easy to judge focus purely by looking at the image. I really never had this kind of experience before using a viewfinder – the one that came close was the proprietary Sony OLED viewfinder for the F55, however I found that viewfinder to have shutter issues (apart from the fact that it only works with the F5 & F55 cameras like mentioned before).
Color reproduction & LUT / Picture Profile
When I attached the C300 for my test of the Gratical HD, I realized that the color reproduction was very accurate – accurate to reality, not necessarily to the camera (which is a good thing for a viewfinder!). The Gratical has extensive controls for color balancing, so I am sure it can fit every need – nice are also the color presets which can safe adjustments for different cameras.
The LUTs feature wasn’t working on my review loaner when I had it, but Zacuto explained to me how it will be working (with the firmware update to be released very soon):
– import – can import lut from Resolve as .look as well as many other LUT files and save to one of 16 presets in the Gratical
– create – can create a lut internally and save to one of 16 presets in the Gratical
– EVF Internal LUT – either select a preset lut for your camera (created by Zacuto), B&W, or any of your 16 presets saved in the Gratical
– SDI out LUT – Exactly the same as the EVF LUT except can be a totally different LUT going to the video village then viewed in the Gratical. Preset, B&W or any one of your 16 presets saved in the Gratical
Now this feature is pretty amazing – you can continue to record Log on the camera, as you display a LUT on the Gratical and just in order to be able to judge the image and exposure. Plus you can have a separate LUT output via the HDMI or HD-SDI out to an additional client monitor – without confusing them with the ungraded Log image.
This feature can’t be underestimated. I find it’s easy to be “unexcited” about images shot in SLog2 or SLog 3 when shooting in the camera, simply because images don’t “pop” as much as they should if you compare them with their real-life counterpart. Selectable LUTs are also key … you can adjust the preview image to your needs.
Some cameras have LUTs built in – however, on the C300 there is the built-in “View Assist” function which simply makes your preview image way more contrasty, but really, really ugly (and you can’t change that LUT) – plus you cannot even trust the waveforms and histogram for exposure anymore, because suddenly it only refers to the displayed image, not the C-Log image that is being recorded …
Not on the Gratical though, the waveforms and histograms always refer to the recorded image, not the displayed image. This might sound minor, but it is actually quite key because you might end up exposing the image incorrectly if you trust the numbers there.
Conclusion
The Zacuto Gratical HD is an incredible viewfinder, certainly on par with the highest quality ones I have ever used – the problem with the other high end ones (Arri, Red, Sony …) is that they don’t work with all cameras.
I plan to purchase the Gratical, which will live with the cameras I am using – now that I will be switching between FS7, C300, C100, A7s and Red Epic even more regularly on my shoots.
Obviously it also makes sense if you have less cameras or just one, because the Gratical strikes me as a very future proof device. I can’t see many features missing from it at all and therefore I think it’s something that’s here to stay.

We thank our sponsor B&H who
has made cinema5D’s news
coverage of NAB 2012 possible.
Get your gear through B&H to support this platform: www.bhphotovideo.comJust as Cineroid, Alphatron plans to make an EVF loupe that uses the iPhone retina display screen, manufactured by LG.
As you may know this display has a high quality and a screen with 960×640 pixels on a very small space which is almost twice as many pixels as the commonly used 800×480 displays. The EVF is manufactured and developed by renown company TVLogic.

At NAB last month a lot of companies showed their working or not yet working Electronic ViewFinders. Very useful additions to our dslr video beasts as they will make fancy, frontheavy rigs obsolete, give us a higher resolution eyepiece display and possibly even do hdmi loopthrough for 3rd party monitoring.
So far these amazing tools were priced between $750 and up to over $1000 dollars, but it seems like the new lowest price has just been set down to as low as $375! Keep in mind that that’s about the price of a good lcd loupe alone…
There is no release date for said evf yet, but Redrock Micro’s Brian Valente, who was first to announce an EVF by the way, says that the other companies are“all seeming to add features to justify a price of $750 or even more”
and “to us, that runs counter to the idea of HDSLRs and democratizing high production value. Something different needs to happen” and laid out their production stage as “(…) going back to the designs to see how we can produce high quality for around $350-375 target. It would be a minor miracle, but that’s what we’re working on.”
Brian, we need your evf and we need it now, or soon, but please hurry.
via planet5D

As we announced earlier this month Cineroid has presented their new EVF at NAB 2011.
While the interior seems to have stayed the same as also the name with the same prefix of EVF4… suggests, the exterior has turned to a more durable metal casing and different input output models.
Cineroid was the first company to introduce an EVF and as we’ve seen in Johnnies review before also the tests at NAB showed that the quality of this 800×480 3.2 inch screen is very good and it’s easy to focus (keep in mind that not only resolution but also screen and evf chip quality is important to get focussing right).
Here’s a video with Joseph who shows us some of the many new features and menu system.
As far as I can tell we’re the first here to present pricing and availability of the new units. See below.
Available June 2011:
Metal / HDSI loopthrough:
EVF4MSS – $1399
Metal / hdmi in – HDSDI out:
EVF4MHS – $1249
Available May 2011:
Metal / hdmi loopthrough:
EVF4MMH – $999
Already available (“older” units that came out some months ago with same screen):
hdmi loopthrough:
EVF4Le – $799
hdmi in only:
EVF4Be – $649
Cineroid EVFs are/will be available at the following resellers throughout the wolrd: Cineroid where to buy

By: Sebastian Wöber
Redrock, Zacuto, Cineroid, smallHD, everbody’s throwing electronic viewfinders at us. Tõnis might be the last to have a working model but I know he is a very dedicated engineer and has put a lot of effort into this one to make it a great product and still affordable. Right now I couldn’t say if he managed to get it right since all he got for NAB was a prototype version.
You might notice how Tõnis emphasizes the software side of the viewfinder. Indeed some manufacturers tend to overlook how important a feature packed and easy to use interface is on a device like this.
What we hear in this video sounds impressing, but we’ll have to wait until May to see if he can deliver. At $750 the specs are very promising. High res, great viewing angle, non reflective, hdmi loopthrough.
We really need a comparison of all the available evfs soon. I’ll try to get hold of all the available evf’s later this year to stress test them to the max cinema5D style.

By: Sebastian Wöber
A great review by Johnnie Behiri about the Cineroid Electronic Viewfinder. If you wanna see if the Cineroid EVF at 799$ is for you check out this in depth review.
Here’s some more info on the Cineroid EVF by Cineroid rep Joseph Jang: (via hdslrworkshops.com)

Brian Valente from Redrock Micro showed off their new wireless follow focus and electronic viewfinder at Createasphere Expo 2010. The EVF works just great and the follow focus is very responsive. The real question here is, when are we going to get it? Next year, I’m afraid. However, it was nice to see the wireless follow focus in action. We tested the wireless follow focus up to about 100ft, then ran out of space. Finally a proper viewfinder for HDSLR work, time willing.
The estimated street price for the EVF will be $595 US. The estimated price for the MFF follow focus will be from around $1500 US and up depending on the system. A Bg Thanks to Aerial Stereo for hooking up the music on this one.
Quick and Dirty Distance Test at the Expo. We were about 100′ away from the camera.
Thanks to our model Amy Jean Davis for standing in.

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